Chapter 127—Dangerous Amusements for the


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  1. Chapter 127—Dangerous Amusements for the
  2. Young
  3. The desire for excitement and pleasing entertainment is a temptation
  4. and a snare to God’s people, and especially to the young.
  5. Satan is constantly preparing inducements to attract minds from the
  6. solemn work of preparation for scenes just in the future. Through the
  7. agency of worldlings he keeps up a continual excitement to induce
  8. the unwary to join in worldly pleasures. There are shows, lectures,
  9. and an endless variety of entertainments that are calculated to lead
  10. to a love of the world; and through this union with the world faith is
  11. weakened.
  12. Satan is a persevering workman, an artful, deadly foe. Whenever
  13. an incautious word is spoken, whether in flattery or to cause the
  14. youth to look upon some sin with less abhorrence, he takes advantage
  15. of it, and nourishes the evil seed, that it may take root and yield
  16. a bountiful harvest. He is in every sense of the word a deceiver,
  17. a skilful charmer. He has many finely woven nets, which appear
  18. innocent, but which are skilfully prepared to entangle the young and
  19. unwary. The natural mind leans toward pleasure and self-gratification.
  20. It is Satan’s policy to fill the mind with a desire for worldly
  21. amusement, that there may be no time for the question, How is it
  22. with my soul?
  23. An Unfortunate Age
  24. We are living in an unfortunate age for the young. The prevailing
  25. [374] influence in society is in favor of allowing the youth to follow the
  26. natural turn of their own minds. If their children are very wild,
  27. parents flatter themselves that when they are older and reason for
  28. themselves they will leave off their wrong habits, and become useful
  29. men and women. What a mistake! For years they permit an enemy
  30. to sow the garden of the heart, and suffer wrong principles to grow
  31. and strengthen, seeming not to discern the hidden dangers and the
  32. 336
  33. Dangerous Amusements for the Young 337
  34. fearful ending of the path that seems to them the way of happiness.
  35. In many cases all the labor afterward bestowed upon these youth
  36. will avail nothing.
  37. The standard of piety is low among professed Christians generally,
  38. and it is hard for the young to resist the worldly influences
  39. that are encouraged by many church-members. The majority of
  40. nominal Christians, while they profess to be living for Christ, are
  41. really living for the world. They do not discern the excellence of
  42. heavenly things, and therefore cannot truly love them. Many profess
  43. to be Christians because Christianity is considered honorable. They
  44. do not discern that genuine Christianity means cross-bearing, and
  45. their religion has little influence to restrain them from taking part in
  46. worldly pleasures.
  47. Some can enter the ballroom, and unite in all the amusements
  48. which it affords. Others cannot go to such lengths as this, yet they
  49. can attend parties of pleasure, picnics, shows, and other places or
  50. worldly amusement; and the most discerning eye would fail to detect
  51. any difference between their appearance and that of unbelievers.
  52. In the present state of society it is no easy task for parents to [375]
  53. restrain their children, and instruct them according to the Bible rule
  54. of right. Children often become impatient under restraint, and wish
  55. to have their own way and to go and come as they please. Especially
  56. from the age of ten to eighteen they are inclined to feel that there
  57. can be no harm in going to worldly gatherings of young associates.
  58. But the experienced Christian parents can see danger. They are
  59. acquainted with the peculiar temperaments of their children, and
  60. know the influence of these things upon their minds; and from a
  61. desire for their salvation, they should keep them back from these
  62. exciting amusements.
  63. When the children decide for themselves to leave the pleasures
  64. of the world and to become Christ’s disciples, what a burden is lifted
  65. from the hearts of careful, faithful parents! Yet even then the labors
  66. of the parents must not cease. These youth have just commenced in
  67. earnest the warfare against sin, and against the evils of the natural
  68. heart, and they need in a special sense the counsel and watch-care
  69. of their parents.
  70. 338 Messages to Young People
  71. A Time of Trial Before the Young
  72. Young Sabbath-keepers who have yielded to the influence of the
  73. world, will have to be tested and proved. The perils of the last days
  74. are upon us, and a trial is before the young which many have not
  75. anticipated. They will be brought into distressing perplexity, and
  76. the genuineness of their faith will be proved. They profess to be
  77. looking for the Son of man; yet some of them have been a miserable
  78. [376] example to unbelievers. They have not been willing to give up
  79. the world, but have united with the world in attending picnics and
  80. other gatherings for pleasure, flattering themselves that they were
  81. engaging in innocent amusement. Yet it is just such indulgences that
  82. separate them from God, and make them children of the world.
  83. Some are constantly leaning to the world. Their views and
  84. feelings harmonize much better with the spirit of the world than with
  85. that of Christ’s self-denying followers. It is perfectly natural that they
  86. should prefer the company of those whose spirit will best agree with
  87. their own. And such have quite too much influence among God’s
  88. people. They take part with them, and have a name among them; but
  89. they are a text for unbelievers, and for the weak and unconsecrated
  90. ones in the church. In this refining time these professors will either
  91. be wholly converted and sanctified by obedience to the truth, or they
  92. will be left with the world, to receive their reward with the worldling.
  93. God does not own the pleasure-seeker as His follower. Those
  94. only who are self-denying, and who live lives of sobriety, humility,
  95. and holiness, are true followers of Jesus. And such cannot enjoy the
  96. frivolous, empty conversation of the lover of the world.
  97. Separation from the World
  98. The true followers of Christ will have sacrifices to make. They
  99. will shun places of worldly amusement because they find no Jesus
  100. there,—no influence which will make them heavenly minded and
  101. [377] increase their growth in grace. Obedience to the word of God will
  102. lead them to come out from all these things, and be separate.
  103. “By their fruits ye shall know them” (Matthew 7:20), the Saviour
  104. declared. All the true followers of Christ bear fruit to His glory.
  105. Their lives testify that a good work has been wrought in them by
  106. Dangerous Amusements for the Young 339
  107. the Spirit of God, and their fruit is unto holiness. Their lives are
  108. elevated and pure. Right actions are the unmistakable fruit of true
  109. godliness, and those who bear no fruit of this kind reveal that they
  110. have no experience in the things of God. They are not in the Vine.
  111. Said Jesus, “Abide in Me, and I in you. As the branch cannot bear
  112. fruit of itself, except it abide in the vine; no more can ye, except ye
  113. abide in Me. I am the vine, ye are the branches: he that abideth in
  114. Me, and I in him, the same bringeth forth much fruit: for without
  115. Me ye can do nothing.” John 15:4, 5.
  116. Those who would be worshipers of the true God must sacrifice
  117. every idol. Jesus said to the lawyer, “Thou shalt love the Lord thy
  118. God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy mind.
  119. This is the first commandment.” Matthew 22:37, 38. The first four
  120. precepts of the decalogue allow no separation of the affections from
  121. God. Nor must anything share our supreme delight in Him. We
  122. cannot advance in Christian experience until we put away everything
  123. that separates us from God.
  124. The great Head of the church, who has chosen His people out of
  125. the world, requires them to be separate from the world. He designs
  126. that the spirit of His commandments, by drawing His followers to
  127. Himself, shall separate them from worldly elements. To love God [378]
  128. and keep His commandments is far away from loving the world’s
  129. pleasures and its friendship. There is no concord between Christ and
  130. Belial.
  131. Promises to the Young
  132. The youth who follow Christ have a warfare before them; they
  133. have a daily cross to bear in coming out of the world and imitating
  134. the life of Christ. But there are many precious promises on record
  135. for those who seek the Saviour early. Wisdom calls to the sons of
  136. men, “I love them that love me; and those that seek me early shall
  137. find me.” Proverbs 8:17.
  138. “Wherefore gird up the loins of your mind, be sober, and hope to
  139. the end for the grace that is to be brought unto you at the revelation
  140. of Jesus Christ; as obedient children, not fashioning yourselves
  141. according to the former lusts in your ignorance: but as He which
  142. hath called you is holy, so be ye holy in all manner of conversation.”
  143. 340 Messages to Young People
  144. 1 Peter 1:13-15. “For the grace of God that bringeth salvation hath
  145. appeared to all men, teaching us that, denying ungodliness and
  146. worldly lusts, we should live soberly, righteously, and godly, in
  147. this present world; looking for that blessed hope, and the glorious
  148. appearing of the great God and our Saviour Jesus Christ; who gave
  149. Himself for us, that He might redeem us from all iniquity, and purify
  150. unto Himself a peculiar people, zealous of good works.” Titus 2:11-
  151. [379] 14.—Counsels to Parents, Teachers, and Students, 325-330.
  152. Chapter 128—Establishing Right Principles in the
  153. Youth
  154. The young should be controlled by firm principle, that they
  155. may rightly improve the powers which God has given them. But
  156. youth follow impulse so much and so blindly, without reference
  157. to principle, that they are constantly in danger. Since they cannot
  158. always have the guidance and protection of parents and guardians,
  159. they need to be trained to self-reliance and self-control. They must
  160. be taught to think and act from conscientious principle.
  161. Relaxation and Amusement
  162. Those who are engaged in study should have relaxation. The
  163. mind must not be constantly confined to close thought, for the delicate
  164. mental machinery becomes worn. The body as well as the
  165. mind must have exercise. But there is great need of temperance in
  166. amusements, as in every other pursuit. And the character of these
  167. amusements should be carefully and thoroughly considered. Every
  168. youth should ask himself, What influence will these amusements
  169. have on physical, mental, and moral health? Will my mind become
  170. so infatuated as to forget God? Shall I cease to have His glory before
  171. me?
  172. Card-playing should be prohibited. The associations and tendencies
  173. are dangerous.... There is nothing in such amusements beneficial
  174. to soul or body. There is nothing to strengthen the intellect, nothing [380]
  175. to store it with valuable ideas for future use. The conversation is
  176. often upon trivial and degrading subjects....
  177. Expertness in handling cards often leads to a desire to put this
  178. knowledge and tact to some use for personal benefit. A small sum is
  179. staked, and then a larger, until a thirst for gaming is acquired, which
  180. leads to certain ruin. How many has this pernicious amusement led
  181. to every sinful practice, to poverty, to prison, to murder, and to the
  182. 341
  183. 342 Messages to Young People
  184. gallows! And yet many parents do not see the terrible gulf of ruin
  185. that is yawning for our youth.
  186. Among the most dangerous resorts for pleasure is the theater.
  187. Instead of being a school for morality and virtue, as is so often
  188. claimed, it is the very hotbed of immorality. Vicious habits and sinful
  189. propensities are strengthened and confirmed by these entertainments.
  190. Low songs, lewd gestures, expressions, and attitudes, deprave the
  191. imagination and debase the morals. Every youth who habitually
  192. attends such exhibitions will be corrupted in principle. There is no
  193. influence in our land more powerful to poison the imagination, to
  194. destroy religious impressions, and to blunt the relish for tranquil
  195. pleasures and sober realities of life, than theatrical amusements.
  196. The love for these scenes increases with every indulgence, as the
  197. desire for intoxicating drink strengthens with its use. The only safe
  198. course is to shun the theater, the circus, and every other questionable
  199. place of amusement.
  200. There are modes of recreation which are highly beneficial to
  201. both body and mind. An enlightened, discriminating mind will
  202. [381] find abundant means for entertainment and diversion, from sources
  203. not only innocent, but instructive. Recreation in the open air, the
  204. contemplation of the works of God in nature, will be of the highest
  205. benefit.—Testimonies for the Church 4:651-653.
  206. Provide Innocent Pleasures
  207. Youth cannot be made as sedate and grave as old age, the child
  208. as sober as the sire. While sinful amusements are condemned,
  209. as they should be, let parents, teachers, and guardians of youth
  210. provide in their stead innocent pleasures, which will not taint or
  211. corrupt the morals. Do not bind down the young to rigid rules and
  212. restraints that will lead them to feel themselves oppressed, and to
  213. break over and rush into paths of folly and destruction. With a firm,
  214. kind, considerate hand, hold the lines of government, guiding and
  215. controlling their minds and purposes, yet so gently, so wisely, so
  216. lovingly, that they will still know that you have their best good in
  217. view.—Counsels to Parents, Teachers, and Students, 335.
  218. Establishing Right Principles in the Youth 343
  219. Recreation in Missionary Work
  220. The hours so often spent in amusement that refreshes neither
  221. body nor soul should be spent in visiting the poor, the sick, and
  222. the suffering, or in seeking to help some one who is in need.—
  223. Testimonies for the Church 6:276.

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